| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8917342 | Science Bulletin | 2018 | 24 Pages |
Abstract
To avoid dangerous climate change impact, the Paris Agreement sets out two ambitious goals: to limit the global warming to be well below 2â¯Â°C and to pursue effort for the global warming to be below 1.5â¯Â°C above the pre-industrial level. As climate change risks may be region-dependent, changes in magnitude and probability of extreme precipitation over China are investigated under those two global warming levels based on simulations from the Coupled Model Inter-Comparison Projects Phase 5. The focus is on the added changes due to the additional half a degree warming from 1.5â¯Â°C to 2â¯Â°C. Results show that regional average changes in the magnitude do not depend on the return periods with a relative increase around 7% and 11% at the 1.5â¯Â°C and 2â¯Â°C global warming levels, respectively. The additional half a degree global warming adds an additional increase in the magnitude by nearly 4%. The regional average changes in term of occurrence probabilities show dependence on the return periods, with rarer events (longer return periods) having larger increase of risk. For the 100-year historical event, the probability is projected to increase by a factor of 1.6 and 2.4 at the 1.5â¯Â°C and 2â¯Â°C global warming levels, respectively. The projected changes in extreme precipitation are independent of the RCP scenarios.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Chemistry (General)
Authors
Wei Li, Zhihong Jiang, Xuebin Zhang, Laurent Li, Ying Sun,
